Dargoleza

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Dargoleza (German Dargeröse ) is a village in the Polish Pomeranian Voivodeship . It belongs to the Gmina Główczyce ( Glowitz ) in the powiat Słupski ( Stolp ).

Geographical location

Dargoleza is located in Western Pomerania , about 36 kilometers east-northeast of the city of Słupsk , 18 kilometers northwest of the city of Lębork and 4.5 kilometers north of the village of Stowięcino .

history

Row of houses in the village

The manor, formerly called Dargherese and Dargorese , was owned by Tetzlaw Damerow on Dargeröse and Dammen in 1487 . Then it became a fief of the Podewils family and, from 1535, the Zastrow family , who lived there until the 17th century. The village was then bought by Kaspar Otto von Massow , Minister of State and Chief President of Pomerania, and remained in the possession of his family for generations. In 1777 it was sold to Moritz Heinrich von Weiher by Carl von Massow . Around the year 1784 there was a village in the Vorwerk , six farmers, three Kossäten , a blacksmith, a schoolmaster and a total of 13 households. In 1796 Dargeröse and Zezenow came into the possession of Kaspar Wilhelm von Zitzewitz as the marriage estate of Dorothea Charlotte Hering, daughter of a wholesale merchant . The village then remained in the possession of the Zitzewitz family until the peasant and lordly conditions were regulated in 1823, when some of the agricultural land was transferred to the farmers.

Since mid-August 1897 Dargeröse was connected to the Stolper Kreisbahn and had its own train station. Dargeroe's first inn was built next to the station in 1904. In 1925 there were 30 houses in Dargeröse. In 1929, the previously independent neighboring village of Prependow was incorporated, and the Dargeröse community has had two places of residence since then:

  • Dargerose
  • Prependow

Before 1945 Dargeröse belonged to the district of Zezenow in the district of Stolp , administrative district of Köslin , the province of Pomerania . The community area totaled 1230 hectares. In 1939 there were 89 households and 372 residents.

The Dargeröse and Prependow estates, which included 1,093 hectares of land, remained in the possession of the Zitzewitz family until 1945. Wilhelm von Zitzewitz , who was raised to the rank of count in 1909, was better known among the owners, although he did not live in Dargeröse, but in Zezenow. On December 23, 1918 he left Dargeröse to his son Wilhelm-Siegfried von Zitzewitz. After his father's death in 1925, Wilhelm-Siegfried von Zitzewitz moved to Zezenow, where he stayed until the Russians invaded in 1945. He had his estate in Dargeröse and Prependow administered by an estate administrator.

Towards the end of the Second World War Dargeröse was occupied by the Red Army on March 9, 1945 and soon afterwards placed under Polish administration. On June 1, 1945, a Polish administrative office was set up in the village. Later all residents were evicted . 142 villagers displaced from Dargeröse were later identified in the Federal Republic of Germany and 127 in the GDR .

In 2006 there were 180 inhabitants in Dargoleza.

literature

Web links

Commons : Dargoleza  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karl-Heinz Pagel : The district of Stolp in Pomerania . Lübeck 1989, p. 436 ( Download location description Dargeröse ) (PDF; 1.0 MB)